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Durovigutum: Roman Godmanchester, Paperback / softback Book

Durovigutum: Roman Godmanchester Paperback / softback

Part of the Archaeopress Roman Archaeology series

Paperback / softback

Description

This publication presents the results of over 30 years of investigation into Roman Godmanchester, (Cambridgeshire), by Michael Green.

The book accurately locates the 25 "sites" investigated, and pinpoints the trenches against the modern street layout.

Although some sites covered large areas, many often had to be conducted as small trenches undertaken by volunteers.

The origins for Durovigutum include evidence for Iron Age settlement which preceded two Roman forts during the 1st century AD.

After its initial military establishment the book goes on to reveal the development of the Roman civic community and its cemeteries along Ermine Street adjacent to its crossing of the Great Ouse. The town was surrounded by defences in the 2nd century and a wall in the 3rd century, its public buildings included a mansio, bath-house and brewery, aisled barns, basilica and several temples, and the socio-economic foundation of the community is explored with specific examples from excavated evidence including different types of domestic housing and workshops.

A tavern, glassware-shop, dairy equipment, pottery manufacture and a smithy are detailed in this book, as well as analysis of land organization, infield and outfield agriculture, and a villa estate at Rectory farm.

Specialist analyses include samian and coarse wares, vessel and window glass, coins, animal bone, dairy production, belief systems and burial practices, as well as the exceptional finds of a hoard of jewellery from one of the mansio pits, and a burial casket of wood and bronze. Although partial or full reports of various excavations have been published in journals and monographs previously, this is the first time Green's full body of work on Godmanchester has been collated and presented in one comprehensive volume.

The book has not tried to include more recent investigations, and most illustrations are by Michael Green, drawn contemporary with his excavations.

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